09-17-2019, 03:05 PM
(09-17-2019, 11:22 AM)FishNDip Wrote:(09-17-2019, 11:02 AM)mysonx3 Wrote: Note that it does not mention APA, MLA, Chicago, or any other citation/formatting style at all during the section of the link you provided having to do with the essay portion of the exam. So it seems that stuff is mostly important for the multiple choice section, not the essay section.
I'm not sure if things have changed, but when I took the exam (this was a couple years ago), I just made an in-text reference to my sources (e.g. "According to a survey by Jones...."), and didn't write a reference list or do any other formatting (other than indenting the start of a new paragraph). I passed with a 63.
That sounds incredible easy, -_- Lol. So how about if I just make my test look like this...?
How to pass the College Composition Course
FishNDip
When doing the second test, where you must cite to sources you can make "an in-text
reference" to your sources, according to mysonx3. So don't worry about APA or MLA!
It's not necessary and it slows you down.
Look about right?
Yep, that's what I did (honestly, I don't even think I put a title/author at the top, but I don't remember for certain). But again, I'm not sure if they've updated the test since I took it, as it's been a couple of years.
Completed:
BA History & Psychology, Thomas Edison State University, March 2020
ASNSM Mathematics, Thomas Edison State University, March 2020
Up Next:
JD, Cornell Law School, Class of 2024
Link to all credits earned: Link
BA History & Psychology, Thomas Edison State University, March 2020
ASNSM Mathematics, Thomas Edison State University, March 2020
Up Next:
JD, Cornell Law School, Class of 2024
Link to all credits earned: Link


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